What is Quetta apple mandi software?
It is a digital khata app for Quetta's fruit adhatis (commission agents) and beoparis who deal in apple, grape, cherry, pomegranate, almond and apricot. Instead of a paper bahi, Pakka Khata records every incoming lot by grower, variety, grade and peti count, then auto-calculates adhat (commission), kaat (deductions) and the final parchi. It is built for Balochistan's seasonal volumes and works fully in Urdu and Roman Urdu.
When are the apple and grape seasons in Quetta?
Balochistan grapes (angoor) usually arrive from around July to October, while the apple (seb) season runs roughly August through November, with cold-stored apples trading into the winter months. Cherry comes earlier in early summer and pomegranate (anaar) in autumn. During peak weeks the Quetta fruit mandi receives a heavy rush of petis daily — Pakka Khata's seasonal lot management lets one adhat handle hundreds of lots without losing count or mixing up grower accounts.
How does grading work for Quetta apples and grapes?
Fruit is sorted into A, B and C grades by size, colour and freedom from kachra (spoilage). An A-grade apple peti can sell for two to three times a C-grade one, so getting the grade split right protects both grower and adhat. Pakka Khata lets you set a separate rate per grade within the same lot and auto-totals the value — no rough estimates, no boli disputes. The same grade engine works for grape, cherry and pomegranate.
How does Pakka Khata calculate adhat and kaat for a fruit lot?
You enter the sale value of the lot; the app applies your adhat percentage (commission on fruit is commonly around 1.5–2.5%), then deducts kaat items — market-committee fee (typically a small percentage), tulai, labour/palledar, jaali or peti charges, and any kachra deduction. The grower's net payable and your commission appear instantly on a clean parchi you can print or send on WhatsApp, so there is no end-of-day argument over the hisaab.
How does it handle peti, jaali bags and cold storage?
Apple and pomegranate move in wooden or cardboard petis (crates); grape and some produce travel in jaali mesh-bags. Pakka Khata tracks every peti and jaali bag by type, size and owner, with deposits, returns and breakage — so crate disputes between grower, beopari and transporter end. For apples held in cold storage over winter, it logs entry/exit dates, quantity and storage charges, giving you a clear cold-chain hisaab for every grower.
Why Quetta fruit adhatis switch from paper bahi to Pakka Khata
During the apple and grape rush, a paper bahi cannot keep up: grades get mixed, peti counts are lost, and udhaar to growers piles up untracked. Pakka Khata gives each grower and buyer a separate ledger, instant outstanding balances, and one-click WhatsApp reminders, so collection is faster and mahandi (advances) stay visible. It runs on a normal Android phone in Urdu or Roman Urdu — your munshi can start in minutes, and it is free to begin.